Sex, power, loneliness, farts. Hunger, hypocrisy, Mr. Potato Head. Texting, abortion, Iraq, nuclear power, fire hydrants, Romulus and Remus, agnosticism, and the pop-up button on a frozen turkey. It all goes into Mike Peters’ whimsical, dyslexic, Pulitzer Prize–winning brain, and a few days later, a bell goes off, the brain whirs, and out comes a picture, drawn in heavy, sure black lines and sealed with a few clever words that stop people all over the world and make them laugh aloud.

He sees his life in cartoons, too. There’s no subtext, no finger-pointing or grudges, no maudlin analysis or rationalization. Just funny, endearing scenes, like his friends splashing around on the brick porch of his house in Dogtown after his mother rolled blankets to seal the stairway and filled the porch with three feet of water to improvise a pool. Or Mike putting on the Superman suit she made him—complete with long johns dyed blue, yellow belt, and cape—and leaping into an empty house’s basement to turn off a spigot someone left running.

What his scenes don’t tell you is how it felt to run home from school sobbing because kids had made fun of his stammer, and to hide, shaking, in the coat closet or behind the TV set, so they couldn’t find him. Or how it felt to hear his mother rage and sob because she couldn’t bear the daily pressure of doing a one-woman TV variety show, singing and dancing and being so charming, the housewives wouldn’t dare click the channel to a soap opera.

He’d rather make you laugh.

In 1947, housewife Charlotte Peters entered an amateur-hour contest—and wound up doing her own show on KSD-TV for almost 23 years. She was the first lady of St. Louis television, musical, bubbly, and willing to do anything to make the crowd laugh. She loved her fans: When she signed autographs, it never felt like quite enough, so she’d smear on extra lipstick and kiss the paper.

Charlotte was a little manic; she’d lost her mother at age 8, and a Dickensian childhood had left her with a wild, joyous energy that could turn dark at the slightest setback. She’d stopped school after eighth grade, so instead of realizing Mike had to do homework, she’d say, “C’mon, let’s go to a movie!” Before she went on TV, she and her sister used to whitewash a wall in the basement, paint a backdrop for whatever show was new on Broadway that year, set up folding chairs, and invite all the neighbors over for a show. Once she was famous, she’d let Mike skip school to meet her celeb guest stars—Jerry Lewis was an instant hero, because he stammered and was funny—or try out every single kind of pen nib at Bader’s art-supply store downtown.

Having Charlotte Peters as a mother was wonderful, but it wasn’t easy. Mike’s friend since fifth grade, Bruce Tuffli, used to knock on their door with trepidation, never sure what kind of mood Mike’s mom would be in. His father was a traveling salesman, so unfortunately, he was gone a lot. He was her “spittin’ opposite,” Tuffli thought, quiet and steady and serious. He could settle her down just by putting his hand on her arm and saying, “Come on, Charlotte.”

Charlotte’s best moods had the shimmer of fantasy. One Fourth of July, she dressed Mike and his cousins in old, torn clothes, smudged dirt on their faces, reminded them to call her Mrs. Peters, and called the Forest Park Highlands amusement park: “This is Charlotte Peters. I’m bringing some orphans—could I possibly have a roll of tickets?” At the park, she handed the kids the tickets and told them to go have fun, and the grown-ups settled in to play pinochle and drink highballs.

At Christmas, she sewed Mike the perfect Superman suit, and he wore it to St. James the Greater School underneath his uniform jacket, shirt, and tie. He’d urge older kids to hit him in the chest—his mother had padded it—then open his shirt to reveal his triumphant powers. “Oh God, I was like a giant in third grade,” he says. He got sent home for leaping off of a urinal onto an unsuspecting janitor.

Mike loved going to movies, and he perfected a technique for getting in free: He’d wait until the crowd lined up for the show, then come up to the ticket-taker’s elbow and say, “My dad’s gonna pick me up. Is it OK if I go see if he’s here yet? You’ll remember me and let me back in, right?”

“Sure, kid, sure,” the distracted ticket-taker would say.

Mike was never big on schoolwork, but he was a sweet kid, an altar boy at St. James the Greater Church. He used to ride his bike all over Dogtown; he’d stop at the deli and buy bags of Fritos, then dump them in his pocket so he could eat them at school without the bag crackling.

Copyright Grimmy, Inc., Distributed by King Features Syndicate

Often, he hung out at the Post-Dispatch, watching the illustrators work while his mother did her show. Ralph Graczak, who drew Our Own Oddities, told him, “Draw everything.” So he drew feet, bags of Fritos, Coke bottles, TV sets, and, again and again, his spaniel-eared mutt, Tony.

Mike loved dogs, and he loved that he lived in Dogtown. He just sort of got dogs: their eager innocence and enthusiasm, and the way they’d sprawl on their backs with their legs open no matter who walked into the room. He wondered if maybe he was a dog once, in a previous life…

Across the living room, the phone rang. Fear snaked through Mike’s gut. “Hello,” he said as he walked toward it. “Hello, hello, hello.” He kept saying it, faster and faster until he’d picked up the phone. That was the only way he knew to get the sound out, so he didn’t have to stand there listening to some friend of his mother’s trilling, “Halloo? Is anybody there?” while he squeezed his eyes shut and fought to push the word out of his mouth.

His mother talked fast; he had to keep up. His brain moved at the speed of lightning; he couldn’t keep up. Whatever the reason, words jammed in the back of his throat like a 10-car pileup on the freeway. He didn’t get cured until college, when a frat brother said, “Hey, I think I can help you. Talk lower.”

He had to think to lower his voice, and that slowed down his brain, so the jam in his throat broke up and the words flowed. Now his speech is fast and fluent, but in casual conversation, he’ll often repeat whole phrases, buying time while the kaleidoscope of images and associations in his brain comes into focus.

In fifth grade, Mike’s report on Walt Disney’s lawsuit over Oswald the Lucky Rabbit was so good, his teacher sent him over to the other fifth-grade class to say it aloud, stammer and all. Practicing the part about Disney inventing Mickey Mouse, he pronounced the phrase “tickled pink” as “pickled tink” and giggled. “That’s funny,” he thought. “I’m gonna do it that way.” He did, and the kids roared. It was the first time he’d made a crowd laugh. Afterward, Bruce saw him on the playground, all by himself, sketching. “I like to draw cartoons, too,” Bruce said.

By the time recess ended, Mike had a future career and a lifelong friendship, both born of Oswald the Lucky Rabbit.

When Mike was 10, his family moved to Webster Groves, to a striking modernist house with a real swimming pool, not a filled-up front porch. Mike called the friend he’d named his dog for, Tony Novelly, who used to beat up anybody who bullied Mike. Tony lived in an apartment in Dogtown, and he loved coming over to swim; he’d never seen a private pool. (Now he has; he’s the CEO of Apex Oil.)

Mike and Tony both went to Christian Brothers College High School, class of ’61. Mike drew a naked lady in a boys’ bathroom stall and signed it because he wanted everybody to know he could draw. He got in trouble regularly; the words of the curriculum bent into meaningless squiggles, and the military discipline was lost on him. “They had you carry M1s—rifles—and wear scapulars with a picture of Jesus on one side and Gen. George Patton on the other,” he’d say later. “It was this weird school that taught you to love people and then kill them. Our Lady of Armageddon.”

By junior year, Mike’s transcript was a binary series: DDDFFDFFFFDFFF. He fell to his knees in the chapel and promised God he would not cheat once in his senior year if God passed him.

God did.

By graduation, Mike had raised a few F’s to C’s; more important, he’d refined the art of cashless dating. He’d take a girl to the airport, walk down to the gate, and pretend she was leaving so he could kiss her. Or he’d take her to the Starlight Room at the Chase Hotel—knowing full well that it wasn’t open on weeknights—and just happen to have wine and cheese in his car, and sneak up to the empty room, with its piano and dreamy view… He says he fell in love with his future wife because she was the first girl who could really play the piano.

Marian Peters remembers it a little differently. She’d seen Mike on his mother’s show—she can still picture him in his little sailor suit, doing a song from South Pacific—and she remembers thinking he was just as crazy as his mom. In high school, she saw him from afar at Washington University’s ROTC military ball; her dad, assistant dean of students at the university, had invited Charlotte Peters to sing. Marian decided Mike was “definitely the clown prince of St. Louis. Cute, but a little…entitled.”

It wasn’t until their sophomore year at Washington University that they actually met. Marian had a crush on Mike’s best friend, Bruce Tuffli, who chaired the Sigma Chi fraternity committee tasked with homecoming decorations. She chaired the same committee for the Delta Gamma sorority, so together they were masterminding construction of a huge papier-mâché bear—until Tuffli’s pants zipper broke.

“Uh…would you like to meet my friend Mike?” he asked, desperate to get away and change his clothes.

“Sure,” she said. “Where is he?”

Tuffli pointed up at the scaffolding, where Mike, who’d drawn the template for the bear, was hanging from one arm making monkey noises in the hope that the pretty girl would notice him.

Marian did not, at the moment she craned her neck, think, “There is the father of my children.” She thought, “There is no way this will ever be serious.”

And it wasn’t—until she showed up for one of their dates and just happened to have Kent cigarettes in her purse (he smoked Kent and hated the menthol in her Newports), and he sheepishly reached into his pocket and pulled out a pack of Newports.

By the end of sophomore year, Mike and Marian were “pinned,” and Marian’s father had gone into apoplexy. But all the times he’d worried because they were sitting outside steaming up the car windows, they’d actually been hashing out their religious differences, arguing about the Virgin Mary and the Immaculate Conception. They were ready for his Calvinist objections.

Mike was still convinced, though, that the dean was lining up engineering students for his daughter to date as soon as the unsuitable, stammering young cartoonist flunked out of college.

Junior year, the dean said he could no longer take summer school to finish up his courses. He would have to complete them—and pass them—by semester’s end. He panicked and sought counsel from his favorite professor, who stroked his chin and thought a minute.

“You want to be a cartoonist, right?” he asked finally. “Well, why don’t you do this: When you go into all your classes, just do cartoons. When you go into figure-drawing class, do the figures in exaggerated, cartoon style. When you go to painting class, paint cartoons.”

“Won’t I get into trouble?”

“Mike, you’re already flunking.”

Copyright Grimmy, Inc., Distributed by King Features Syndicate

He took the advice, and to his amazement, nobody yelled at him. The grade report came, and he opened the envelope with shaking fingers.

He had all A’s and B’s.

Mike and Marian both graduated in May 1965. Marian already had a teaching job in Chicago, starting in the fall, and Mike had a job lined up with the Chicago Daily News. They planned their wedding for August. The only way all of their parents would attend was if both a priest and a minister officiated, so they got a special dispensation from Rome.

In July, Marian opened TIME magazine and froze. The article, just a one-pager, was about the Archdiocese of St. Louis having these double marriage ceremonies for “mixed marriages.”

Rome rescinded its dispensation. Marian and Mike phoned all their guests and explained that the lovely engraved invitation was null and void. They went to Chicago to take their jobs. “We tried to do it the upstanding way,” Marian said. “Let’s just lie.” She cheerfully assured a priest that she would raise their children Catholic, and they went first to a Presbyterian church, then to a Catholic church, for separ-

ate ceremonies.

One Sunday afternoon, Mike and Marian were pulling away from his parents’ house, planning to drive out west for a picnic. Bang! The car screeched to a halt. A tire had blown. On one of his mother’s bad days, that would’ve been all it took. “The day is ruined!” she would have announced.

“I think we’ve got a flat tire,” he said, his voice tentative.

“So let’s change it,” Marian said.

It felt like an epiphany. No drama. We change the tire, then we go have fun.

With that, the tone for their marriage was set.

In 1966, Mike was drafted. He got through basic training by drawing cartoons of its ordeals late at night in the men’s room. Marian went with him to Okinawa, Japan, where he worked as an artist for the U.S. Army’s 7th Psychological Operations Group. She landed a teaching job that carried military rank, so she took him to the officers’ club once a week.

When he was discharged, he went back to the Daily News. His mentor, Bill Mauldin—a St. Louis native who’d won two Pulitzer Prizes for cartooning, and who was the reason Mike wanted to do political cartoons in the first place—came down the hall from the Chicago Sun-Times, which shared the building, and told Mike he’d just recommended him for a job at the Dayton Daily News.

Bespectacled, Mike wore a coat and tie to his new job. One day it hit him: He was now officially a mild-mannered cartoonist. He put on the Superman suit Marian had bought him for Halloween and wore it to the next editorial meeting, arriving early and climbing out on a ledge so he could make his entrance: “Sorry I’m late. I ran into lousy weather over Cleveland.”

Henry Kissinger was secretary of state, and Mike was racking his brain to come up with a cartoon about him. The TV kept blaring news about the first space shuttle being flown from California to Florida on a huge plane, and the kids were yelling that the space shuttle was gonna go over Dayton, and Mike was yelling, “Please, keep it down!” and all of a sudden the house started shaking, and a shadow passed over them, and everything went black.

“The shuttle just went over,” Mike realized. “And I’m living in the city where the Wright brothers invented the airplane.” He crumpled the Kissinger sheets and drew the shuttle on top of a huge plane on top of the Wright brothers’ plane. After it was published, the astronauts asked for a copy.

“It takes a friggin’ supersonic plane and the house to shake and go black for me to say, ‘Wait a minute, why don’t I do the shuttle?’” he thought afterward. “When you’re trying to do some big, heavy cartoon, just be listening to things around you, because those are the things that people care most about.”

When Mike’s eldest daughter, Marci, was 12, she sank into the bleakest, angriest of moods. “The only time she would ever talk to me was if she needed me desperately,” Mike says. “One day she called and said, “Dad! Dad! I left my English term paper in my room. Bring it down as fast as you can!”

When Marian walked into their bedroom, Mike was stepping into his Superman tights.

“What are you doing?”

“You don’t want to know.”

Copyright Grimmy, Inc., Distributed by King Features Syndicate

He put a trench coat over the costume and drove to school. “I’m walking down the hall in a trench coat with a long red cape sticking out behind me and red shoes, saying hi to the janitor, and nobody says, ‘What the f—k are you doing?’” He walked up to the glass window in Marci’s classroom door, took off his trench coat, and put his hand on his hip like Superman. He heard a high girl’s voice say, “Oh shit.” The teacher came to the door and said, “Why, Superman, what brings you here?”

“You have a little girl here named Marci Peters,” Superman replied, knowing his daughter would cringe at the “little.” “She wanted me to bring this down as fast as I could!”

Marci didn’t speak to him for months.

In 1980, Mike decided that he should stop trying to win big prizes and just draw stuff that made him laugh.

In 1981, he won the Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning.

The same year, he did a series of animated editorial cartoons, “Peters Postscripts,” for NBC’s Nightly News. His work was now appearing in Newsweek, TIME, U.S. News & World Report, and The New Republic.

That spring, Our Lady of Armageddon invited Mike back to speak. CBC wanted him in its Hall of Fame. Pickled tink, he started paging through his old high-school yearbooks for inspiration; maybe he could do a few cartoons for the occasion.

In the senior yearbook, he found a note from Mr. Morgan, his English teacher:

Fritos remained Mike’s muse. He crunched them nervously, one handful after another, whenever he had to think up an idea. And in 1984, he needed a lot of ideas: He was doing The World of Cartooning With Mike Peters, a 14-part interview series for PBS, and starting a comic strip, Mother Goose & Grimm, about a fairy-tale goose and her pet dog. His doctor kept lecturing him about high cholesterol, so he tried a trick: He’d take a big handful of Fritos and then, while his mouth was full, crush the rest of the bag and toss it in the trash.

One day Marian walked in and saw that the entire top half of her husband’s body had disappeared into his trash can.

“What are you doing?” she asked.

He came up licking salt and grease from his fingers.

“Oh my God,” she said. “You’re the dog.”

And that’s when it clicked. He’d been drawing Mother Goose & Grimm for months without realizing it.

He was the dog.

After Vanity Fair put a naked, pregnant Demi Moore on its August 1991 cover, Mike drew Saddam Hussein, naked and pregnant on the cover of a magazine called Insanity Fair. Under the headline “Saddam Bares All,” Hussein stands, hands splayed to cradle a distended stomach emblazoned with the sign for atomic energy. He’s looking straight at you, eyes a little crossed, mouth disappearing beneath his bushy mustache, and he looks somehow vulnerable, caught.

Mike’s good at capturing vulnerability.

A bleeding-heart liberal, he tried hard, during the Reagan years, to draw President Ronald Reagan as mean, but it never worked. That’s because he wasn’t mean, in Mike’s opinion, just clueless. When you cartoon, yes, you work broad-brush, you stereotype, you exaggerate—but you can’t lie.

“During Nixon’s time, God, it was great to be a cartoonist,” he says. “Nixon was such a scoundrel. James G. Watt was fun to draw, too, because you knew that he was conniving. There are some people, when you draw them—if I did a bad cartoon of Obama, I couldn’t make him mean and angry. He’s very calm, very steady. You know he thinks about things.

“I learned very early in cartooning—there are some guys I wanted to be like. Paul Conrad, he was a fabulously mean, angry cartoonist. Herblock [Herb Block], when he got into his office at The Washington Post, you would hear him breathing like Darth Vader, and he would do wonderfully vicious cartoons.” He sighs. “Unfortunately, I’m not mean and angry. I’ve never been. The only reason people would ever take the time to come back and look at my work is if it made them laugh.”

When Mike’s editorial cartoons started to be syndicated, he was giddy at the compliment—but it didn’t make him work any faster. He was once threatened with the bill for FedExing his late cartoon to hundreds of newspapers. And one day, when he was really behind and fiddling, Marian walked into his office, took out a dollar bill, and calmly set it on fire. She let it crumble into ash, then took out another bill, lit the corner…

“If he doesn’t have a good idea, I go shopping,” she says. “There is no assurance for him; it’s all got to come from within. If he draws something he likes, the entire world could tell him it’s shit, and he wouldn’t care.”

That hasn’t happened, though. “His cartoons are incisive; they are astute,” says cartoonist Steve Kelley, editor of Best Editorial Cartoons of the Year. “They reduce pompous egos to little puddles of goo.

“His style is wonderful because there’s so much depth—so much black ink that you simply cannot avoid it, even if you wanted to,” Kelley continues. “And his work is disarmingly whimsical. On the surface, it appears almost silly, and as you’re walking away, you realize your legs were cut off at the knees.”

Kelley points out that not only do political cartoons reach far more readers than caustic editorials, they also have more power, sneaking behind people’s defenses in a matter of seconds.

“If you beat your chest about some policy, you are taking it seriously; if you ridicule it, you are dismissing it,” he says. “To point and giggle is the worst thing you can do to somebody who wants to be taken seriously.”

Mike jams his Pookie—the little red pillow he hugs for reassurance—between his back and the beige porcelain tub. He plugs his laptop into the outlet in the undersink cabinet. The Colorado house has thick forest-green carpet on the floor, not hard, cold ceramic tile like the Orlando, Fla., house, so his tush will be reasonably comfortable for the next two hours. He’ll stay here—no phone, no Fritos—until he has an idea for Mother Goose & Grimm.

It might take three days of two-hour sessions in the sensory-deprivation tank of his bathroom before a single good idea emerges. When he started this ritual, his housekeeper worried for weeks: Was Mr. Peters ill? She was used to him working on his editorial cartoons out at the wooden drawing board with the TV going constantly: CNN, C-SPAN, FOX News to get riled up. But the comic strip was different, personal. It had to come from within.

Mike doesn’t pretend the world’s rosy, but he does manage to filter and soften adversarial relationships, especially in MGG. Grimm started out wanting Attila, the cat, to jump out the window; now the two roll their eyes at each other’s foibles like an old married couple. Animals hunt prey—so Mike puts Grimmy in an easy chair reading To Kill a Mockingbird, saying, “Darn… I thought this was an instruction manual.” Or he draws a lion tossing bones over his shoulder, telling Dorothy and the Tin Man, “Relax. Why do you think they call them Munchkins?”

True to the Brothers Grimm, his fairy-tale cartoons make it easier to tolerate what’s dark. He learned how to laugh through anger or upset as a kid, and the lessons left him gentle.

In the early days, Mike dipped pen in ink. Then hard-tip felt pens came out. Then he went to brushes; he still uses brush pens with cartridges. “And now I have this thing that cost $2,500, a tablet you can actually draw on with a stylus. I’ve had it for half a year, and I’m afraid to plug it in.”

His office is an archaeological dig. Books are laid on the shelves horizontally, so you don’t see the spines, only the white pages. Every time he wants one, he has to look through all of them to find it. Near the drawing table, he has a copy machine, so he can draw things small and blow them up or draw them big and shrink them. There’s a little picture of Grimmy flexing his muscles, another with Grimmy holding a huge heart (for Marian). His 1991 Reuben Award is here, naming him Outstanding Cartoonist of the Year—his profession’s highest honor. His Pulitzer is here.

His secret? Never settling for an idea that’s just good enough. Trying again, letting the sheets stack up in layers on his drawing table until something makes him giggle, because if it doesn’t make him laugh right then, he’ll groan when he sees it in print.

Once he was in a mall in D.C., waiting while Marian shopped, and he saw a woman reading the comics in The Washington Post. “I knew where my strip was, right at the bottom. I’m looking at her, and she gets down to the bottom, and I see her giggle. It was the best feeling in the world! I think about that lady when I do a cartoon: Will she giggle?”

Another secret is doing more rather than less: three or four editorial cartoons a week and seven comic strips. “If I do two strips—the storyline, and then whatever else I find funny that’s not the storyline—that keeps me excited every day. Because I may get tired of a storyline, or I may get tired of the dog talking to the goose about something, so then I switch over to another strip, and I get excited.”

He loves visual puns, like his CAT scan cartoon, in which a cat perches on a patient’s knees, scrutinizing his chest with binoculars. But now that the strip is printed in many different languages, he has to hold back—unless it’s so great he can’t stop himself.

For the editorial cartoons, he mines anything that pisses him off, then filters out all the excess rhetoric and data, letting the picture and a few words carry the essence. “There have been thousands of editorials written about the Vietnam War, but I can’t quote you from any of those articles,” he says. “But David Levine drawing Lyndon Johnson lifting his shirt to show his scar from his operation, and the scar is in the shape of Vietnam?

“You think there are things you can’t do cartoons about, and the truth is, you can,” he remarks. “Like 9/11. Or when the Challenger crashed. On the first two or three days, what you do is what you feel, and that’s just horror. You can’t do anything funny; you can’t do anything mean yet. So you do the Statue of Liberty with her eyes covered. Then, after those three days, you can start asking some questions, and at day four or five, you can start saying, ‘Why did this happen?’”

His favorite cartoons are the ones that get him in the most trouble, like the picture of Jesus back in the Moral Majority days, with a caption saying that if this man were a candidate, he would be for social reform, against a big military budget, and against capital punishment, and therefore unacceptable to the religious right. “I got so many bad letters,” he groans. “Then two teachers sent me envelopes filled with letters written by their fifth-grade students. Two separate teachers had asked their students to explain the cartoon. And all the students got it. They got the irony.”

We lose that ability to grasp irony, he says, because we get rigid. He takes a sip of water, then slides the glass forward. “I could give a Republican this glass of water and they would find something wrong if Obama had touched it. And if Cheney had touched it, I would say, ‘Oh, that sonofabitch.’ You get so clawed into your extremes.”

He was nervous and a little sweaty in the morning sun, but he didn’t flub a word. He said his fraternity brothers had reminded him that his first degree was honorary. He talked about his mother being on TV: “It was like Oprah and I Love Lucy all in the same show.” He said he was “a weird little kid. I was cross-eyed, so one of my eyes was always looking at the other eye, and any picture I had always had me smiling, but it was sad… And I was very skinny; I had a concave chest… I had this horrible stutter… My mom would introduce me to 100 people because she had this TV show, and she would say, ‘Hi, this is my son, Mike. He’s a future president of the United States,’ and I’d look up cross-eyed, and I’d go c-c-c-c-c. And people would go, ‘Oh, Jesus,’ and then kind of turn away… I started drawing because I thought if I drew, I wouldn’t have to open my mouth.”

He had the crowd of thousands’ single-minded attention, and they were laughing hard. He smoothed his gown, wiped perspiration from his forehead, and sketched more scenes from his life, sliding his Superman suit in somewhere in the middle. He talked about dreams and unlikely successes, and he urged the graduates, “Write down the things you love…and then for six or seven months, try to get a job in those things you love.”

He ended by calling out, “You, the class of 2012, you are Superman!”—ripping open his black gown to reveal his seventh Superman suit.

Every time 1525 Gregg Avenue in Dogtown is sold, the sellers tell the new owners, “A cartoonist will be coming up to the front porch; just let him sit there.” Mike goes back every time he’s in town, sits on the porch, and lets the images wash over him. That first decade of life was so free, so pure. His mother didn’t go to work until he started school; before that, they used to paint dinosaurs together.

He felt a bit ashamed—although not enough to stop going back—until he read about Walt Disney going alone to his “dreaming tree” whenever he visited his hometown of Marceline, Mo. “He was keeping the kid in him alive,” Mike says.

Mike and Marian are friends with Ken Burns, and he recently showed them footage from his upcoming documentary. Marian laughed a little too hard at the part where a member of Teddy Roosevelt’s staff prepares a guest by saying there’s something he has to understand: Mr. Roosevelt is 6.

Mike might be older than 6, but he’s definitely under 10, still in that golden age before his mother became a star and teachers got strict and everybody started taking everything so seriously. Plus, he has dyslexia, Marian points out, “and that is just another definition of creativity. When you have your normal human with synapses in nice little lines, they get patterned, and you always put the dishes back on the same shelf—but you may never come up with a comic strip.”

Life with a husband so much younger can get annoying, but Marian and Mike both realize that by managing the practical side of their lives, she’s preserving something essential for him, something uninhibited and innocent. Everything is new to Mike; everything is special. He greets people with a golden retriever’s exuberance, tells strangers he loves them, hugs them goodbye. His energy spills over and never runs dry.

“He’s hard to keep up with,” admits Tuffli. “We’ve gone on safaris with them to Africa, three-week cruises to the Baltic—there’s an energy most normal people can’t take for too long.”

Mike inherited his mother’s buoyancy and mischief, but because he didn’t suffer her childhood, he doesn’t have her temper, Tuffli adds. “You never knew what you were going to get with her. You always know what you’re going to get with Mike.”

Comments (2)

Mike Peters

My ten-year-old chose Mike Peters as his famous Missourian for a school project. Jeanette's story helped us learn more about Mike's struggles to overcome disability and find his voice through cartooning. My son has similar challenges and a obsession with drawing comics. What a great story of resilience and creative spirit!

Mary Fitzgeraldmore than 1 year ago

Mike's biography

I feel a little slow as I have just read this great story after following MGG and his editorial cartoons forever. It's nice to know that a weird childhood can make such a great talent sometimes!